Early-diverging bumblebees from across the roof of the world: the high-mountain subgenus Mendacibombus revised from species’ gene coalescents and morphology (Hymenoptera, Apidae)
Author
Williams, Paul H.
Author
Huang, Jiaxing
Author
Rasmont, Pierre
Author
An, Jiandong
text
Zootaxa
2016
4204
1
1
72
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4204.1.1
3f8866d2-529e-43ad-b971-29fc52a13858
1175-5326
192302
C050058A-774D-49C0-93F9-7A055B51C2A0
7.
Bombus himalayanus
(Skorikov)
(
Figs 4
,
20
,
30
,
51, 53, 54
,
62
)
Mendacibombus varius
Skorikov 1914
:125
(not of
Lepeletier de
Saint-Fargeau
1832:381, =
B. campestris
(Panzer))
, typelocality citation (
Cyrillic
) ‘[pass Zodji-La, … along the river
Sind
above
Sonamarg
]’.
Lectotype
queen by present designation
ZISP
examined, (Cyrillic) ‘[Zodzi-La]’ (Zoji-La, Great Himalaya,
India
). Note 1. Synonymised with
Bombus himalayanus
(Skorikov)
by
Williams (1991)
.
[
Mendacibombus varius
var.
differens
,
var.
sexfasciatus
,
var.
formosulus
Skorikov 1914
:126
, infrasubspecific.]
Mendacibombus mendax
subsp.
himalayanus
Skorikov 1914
:127
, type-locality citation (Cyrillic) ‘[pass Kordong]’.
Holotype
queen by monotypy
ZISP
examined, (
Cyrillic
) ‘[pass
Kordong
]’ (Khardung-La,
Ladakh Range
,
India
).
Note
2.
Mendacibombus varius
Skorikov; Skorikov 1923
:149
;
Skorikov, 1931
:213
;
Skorikov 1933
:2
.
Bombus
(
Mendacibombus
)
mendax
Subsp.
himalayanus
(Skorikov)
;
Richards 1930
:635
.
[
Mendacibombus margreiteri himalayanus
Skorikov; Skorikov 1933
:2
, misidentification.]
Bombus
(
Mendacibombus
)
himalayanus varius
(Skorikov)
;
Williams, 1991
:fig.
5 male
.
Bombus (Mendacibombus) himalayanus
(Skorikov)
;
P.H. Williams 1991
:41
;
P.H. Williams 1998
:99
;
P.H. Williams 2004
:no. 27;
Suhail
et al.
2009
:3
[not seen].
Bombus himalayanus
(Skorikov)
;
Sabir
et al.
2011
:161
[not seen].
Note
1 (
varius
).
Skorikov’s
original description of several females of the taxon
varius
cites the
type
locality as the
Sind
valley above
Sonamarg
up to the Zoji-La pass in the Great Himalaya. The
ZISP
collection studied by
Skorikov
contains a queen that agrees with the original description and carries the labels: (1) white, handwritten (
Cryrillic
) ‘[[
Pass
] Zodzi-La, Hi- / malaya> 3000 mt. /
G. Jakobson
]
12‒15.VI.12
’; (2) white, printed (
Cyrillic
) ‘[
k.
Skorikova
]’; (3) red, printed ‘
Holotypus
’; (4) white, handwritten ‘varius’; (5) red, handwritten ‘
Lectotypus
Mendaci-
/
Bombus varius Skor.
/ design.
Podbolotsk
.
’ (
M. Podbolotskaya
, unpublished); (6) green, printed ‘
Mendacibombus
/ MD# 735 det. PHW’; (7) red, printed ‘
LECTOTYPE
[female] /
Mendacibombus
/
varius
/
Skorikov
, 1914
/ det.
PH Williams
2012’; (6) white, printed ‘[female]
Bombus
/ (
Mendacibombus
) /
himalayanus
/ det
.
PH
Williams 2012’.
This
specimen, which is complete, is regarded as one of
Skorikov’s
syntypes
and is designated here as the
lectotype
in order to reduce uncertainty in the identity and application of the name.
A second queen collected at the Zoji-La by Jakobson in 1912 (MD#535, NHM, sent by Skorikov as part of an exchange with the NHM in 1934), closely similar in morphology, is designated here as a paralectotype and interpreted as conspecific.
Note 2 (
himalayanus
). Skorikov’s original description of the taxon
himalayanus
specifies that there was only one type specimen for the name
himalayanus
, so this specimen in the ZISP is regarded as the holotype by monotypy (
ICZN, 1999: Article 73.1.2
).
Etymology.
The species is named after the Himalaya, the mountain range at the southern edge of the Qinghai- Tibetan plateau.
Taxonomy and variation.
The interpretation of this species is based here on evidence from DNA, as well as on the form of the female labrum (and between species on the form of the male genitalia). This disagrees with earlier concepts, diagnosed originally in terms of the hair colour pattern (
Skorikov, 1914
), because the species appears to be much more variable in colour pattern than was originally understood.
Skorikov (1914)
described a single queen of the taxon
himalayanus
s. str.
(MD#731) from the Ladakh range as having the corbicula framed with black hairs, the pale bands and most of the side of the thorax lemon yellow, and the black band between the wing bases extensively intermixed with yellow hairs. One yellow-banded queen with more extensive black hair (MD#316) and a queen and a few older workers (MD#484‒489, 499, 4054, 4055) with more extensive yellow hair are known from elsewhere in Kashmir (
Williams, 1991
). The yellow-banded dark queen from Ladakh yielded only a short COI sequence (
Fig. 13
: MD#316), although this is enough to support the inference from morphology by
Williams (1991)
that the taxon
himalayanus
s. str
. and the taxon
varius
are parts of the same species.
Skorikov (1914)
also described a single male with a yellow thorax with black hairs between the wing bases from Kilian (Raskam range,
Xinjiang
) under the name
himalayanus
s. str
.. Unfortunately this specimen could not be found in the ZISP collection (M. Podbolotskaya in litt.). But this is likely to be the same individual that
Skorikov (1931:215)
later listed from the ‘Raskemkette, Nordhang des Kilieng’ as
Mendacibombus makarjini
.
Other specimens are known from the Great Himalaya and Pir Panjal ranges with a similar banded colour pattern, but with more extensive black between the wing bases and on the side of the thorax, and with the pale bands on the thorax and often on T2 white (Skorikov’s taxon
varius
). These specimens have similar morphology of the female labrum and have been interpreted previously as conspecific (
Williams, 1991
). The short COI sequences available are sufficient to give support for this white-banded taxon being conspecific with the yellow-banded taxon
himalayanus
s. str.
(
Fig. 13
: the white-banded taxon
varius
MD#675, 417 and the yellow-banded taxon
himalayanus
s. str
. MD#316).
Males (known only for the white-banded taxon
varius
) usually have the hair of T3‒7 orange at least in part, but occasionally the hair of T3‒7 predominantly black (MD#426) or (as visible in photographs) entirely black.
Diagnostic description.
Wings nearly clear (
cf.
B. avinoviellus
).
Female hair colour pattern:
generally black, but with pale hair (yellow and/or grey-white) varying from completely absent from the head to covering most of the face but with at most only a few pale hairs on the anterior vertex of the head, in a transverse band anteriorly on the thoracic dorsum and extending laterally and ventrally to just below the wing base (occasionally much intermixed with black hairs and almost absent), or as white hair to half way down the side of the thorax, or to all of the way to the midleg base, often but not always in a transverse band posteriorly on the thoracic dorsum (scutellum; so the thoracic dorsum between the wing bases may have the hair entirely black, or rarely may have many pale hairs intermixed), on T1‒2 (T1 is more often yellow than T2 or the thoracic bands, so that individuals may have both yellow and white hair), T3 with orange hair as a posterior fringe and throughout T4‒6, T3 laterally with black hair that often extends onto T4 and even T5 laterally (
cf.
B. avinoviellus
), T6 medially with black hair and often entirely black. Hindleg tibia with corbicular fringes usually black, but sometimes with a few hairs in the fringes orange-tipped or rarely more extensively pale-tipped.
Female morphology:
labrum with the basal depression narrow, the transverse ridge broader medially than the basal depression, in the median third subsiding only slightly with large punctures overflowing across it from the basal depression, the lateral tubercles laterally with scattered large and medium punctures (
Fig. 20
) (
cf.
B. avinoviellus
). Clypeus in its central half with scattered punctures, small punctures spaced sparsely by more than their own widths (
cf.
B. avinoviellus
), the anterior depressions with a narrow band of dense punctures that is only one or two punctures in breadth (
cf.
B. avinoviellus
).
Male morphology
: genitalia (
Fig. 30
) with the volsella distally rounded (finger-shaped) and curled back dorsally but not anteriorly; volsella at its broadest near the midpoint of its length, the dorsal surface just distal to this point without a raised curved ridge just inside the inner margin; volsella with the apex broad, broader than the adjacent penisvalve head, but with the apex narrowly produced and finger-like. Gonostylus from the dorsal aspect rectangular, with a distinct outer distal corner. Penis-valve inner shoulder located at Ĺ 0.5× the length of the penis valve from the distal end to the broadest point of the spatha; penis valve proximal to the outer shoulder <2× as broad as the penis-valve head; penis-valve breadth just proximal to the penis-valve head 0.11× the length of the penis valve distal to the broadest point of the spatha.
Material examined.
16 queens
72 workers
9 males
, from
India
and
Pakistan
(
Fig. 62
:
NHM
,
OLL
, PW,
ZISP
), with
3 specimens
sequenced (interpretable sequences listed in
Figs. 11–13
).
Habitat and distribution.
Flower-rich alpine grassland, at elevations 2077‒(3307)‒
4800 m
a.s.l.. A species of the Karakorum and west Himalayan mountains. Compared to
B. avinoviellus
, the distribution of
B. himalayanus
extends slightly further to the north but less far to the east and it tends to occur at higher elevation (and the two species rarely occur together at precisely the same site). There is some overlap with
B. marussinus
in the northwestern Karakorum, but the two species seldom occur together.
Bombus himalayanus
replaces the eastern
B. waltoni
in the higher wet alpine zone of the western Himalaya. A regional distribution map is available for Kashmir (
P.H. Williams 1991
). The yellow-banded taxon
himalayanus
s. str.
from Ladakh appears to be very rare.
Food-plants.
Williams (1991)
.
Behaviour.
Williams (1991)
, mate-searching male shown in
Fig. 4.